How are carpets made?

nats's picture

Carpets are so big - they are spread over entire rooms. How are such large carpets made? what is the process of the same? Where are carpets made in India?

Trsmd's picture

The carpet you currently have in your home may have been boiled in a vat of water at some point. It's one method of dyeing carpet during production.

Carpet may be somewhat easy to overlook, but if you get down close to the stuff, you'll find not all carpet is alike.

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Arjun2008's picture

A carpet is any loom-woven, felted textile or grass floor covering. Unlike woven carpets, embroidery carpets are not formed on a loom. Their pattern is established by the application of stitches to a cloth (often linen) base. The tent stitch and the cross stitch are two of the most common. Embroidered carpets were traditionally made by royal and aristocratic women in the home, but there has been some commercial manufacture since steel needles were introduced (earlier needles were made of bone) and linen weaving improved in the 16th century. Mary Stewart Queen of Scots is known to have been an avid embroiderer. 16th century designs usually involve scrolling vines and regional flowers (for example, the Bradford carpet). They often incorporate animal heraldry and the coat of arms of the maker. Production continued through the 19th century. Victorian embroidered carpet compositions include highly illusionistic, 3-dimensional flowers. Patterns for tiled carpets made of a number of squares, called Berlin wool work, were introduced in Germany in 1804, and became extremely popular in England in the 1830s. Embroidered carpets can also include other features such as a pattern of shapes, or they can even tell a story.

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